Photos of the Day 11/10

People in Kiev, Ukraine, protest against the possible cancellation of social bonuses to war veterans next year. Konstantin Chernichkin/Reuters

An Afghan looks out of a bakery shop as he waits for customers on a roadside in Kabul. Ahmad Masood/Reuters

Farmers shout slogans at a rally against Trans-Pacific Partnership talks in Tokyo. Thousands of Japanese farmers rallied on Wednesday to demand their government steer clear of a US-led free trade initiative that would open the heavily protected agricultural sector to fierce competition. Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

Relatives of a missing person whisper as they participate in a protest organized by the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons, in Srinagar, India. According to APDP, more than 10,000 people have disappeared in the Kashmir Valley since an armed rebellion broke out in the region in 1989. Dar Yasin/AP Photo

A group of Zulu warriors from the Mighty Zulu Nation Theatre Company perform a traditional Zulu welcome in front of St Paul's Cathedral for the new lord mayor of the City of London Michael Bear, not pictured, to mark the inauguration of the lord mayor as he takes up his post in central London. Dominic Lipinski/AP Photo

Saudi special forces display their skills, during a ceremony as they prepare for the influx of people to participate in the hajj, in Arafat, Saudi Arabia. Hassan Ammar/AP Photo

Soldiers march during a ceremony at the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk on the 72nd anniversary of his death in Ankara. Ataturk, the founder of modern, secular Turkey, was the country's first president from 1923 until his death on Nov. 10, 1938 at the age of 57. Umit Bektas/Reuters

Demonstrators break windows of the ruling Conservative Party headquarters building during a protest in central London. Students demonstrating against higher tuition fees burned placards, scuffled with riot police, and smashed windows. Paul Hackett/Reuters

Indonesian soldiers search for victims killed in the eruption of Mt. Merapi in Cangkringan, Indonesia. The volcano has forced President Obama to cut short his visit to the country, and some international airlines are canceling flights over concerns about air safety. AP Photo

The former Ohio Edison Mad River Power Plant’s 275 foot smoke stack in Springfield, Ohio, threatens spectators and surrounding buildings as it falls the wrong way during its demolition. There were no injuries reported in the accident but power was knocked out for more than 8,000 customers when the smoke stack crushed several pieces of power equipment. Bill Lackey/Springfield News-Sun/AP Photo

King penguins are followed by visitors in the zoo in Basel, Switzerland. Georgios Kefalas/AP Photo

Fireworks explode in front of the national parliamentary building during the 100-day countdown towards the ICC Cricket World Cup in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Andrew Biraj/Reuters

US artist Seth Kirby views part of his 'Joshua Light Show' at the 'High Society' exhibition in central London. Illicit drugs may be a scourge of modern life but the use of mind-altering substances is threaded through human history and cultures, from betel nut in Asia to coca leaf in the Andes to espresso coffee in Europe. With illegal drug use on the rise and trade in banned products worth some $320 billion a year, according to UN estimates, a new exhibition at London's Wellcome Collection seeks to put today's "high society" into perspective. Toby Melville/Reuters

Huda Abu Roman (c.), from Jordan's Abu Roman tribe, speaks with her supporters at her electoral headquarters in Salt near Amman. Huda won a seat in the parliamentary elections on Monday. Ali Jarekji/Reuters

Children playing on a trampoline are silhouetted at sunset in the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan. Mohsin Raza/Reuters

Spc. Simran Lamba, (l.), recites the Pledge of Allegiance for the first time as an American citizen, following his naturalization ceremony at Fort Jackson, S.C. Lamba is the first enlisted soldier to be granted a religious accommodation for his Sikh articles of faith since 1984. Sikhism, a 500-year-old religion founded in India, requires its male followers to wear a turban and beard and keep their hair uncut. Army policies since 1984 had effectively prevented Sikhs from enlisting by barring those items. But Lamba was granted a rare exception because he has skills the Army wants, the Indian languages Hindi and Punjabi. Brett Flashnick/AP Photo

A statue salutes as the sun rises at Ohio Western Reserve National Cemetery in Rittman, Ohio. The first Armistice Day was marked on Nov. 11, 1919. Amy Sancetta/AP Photo

Assailed first by a debt crisis, then acting as a front line in Europe’s migrant crisis, Greece has had an extremely difficult few years. Yet it has avoided civil conflict and has remained in the eurozone, contrary to many expectations.